ChargeLedger
Electric vehicle planning

Range decisions should be built on numbers, not optimistic dashboard guesses.

ChargeLedger helps EV owners plan road segments with disciplined assumptions for battery size, motorway speed, cabin climate load, and reserve margin. The result is a cleaner estimate of usable range and the charging stop you actually need.

⭐ 4.7/5 from 312 operators
4,217 trip checks logged this quarter
Built for highway, winter, and towing scenarios
Live planning snapshot
Estimated real-world reach287 km
Suggested top-up at destination24 minutes DC
Reserve on arrival14%
Example assumes a 77 kWh pack, 112 km/h motorway pace, 6°C weather, and a 12% arrival buffer. Conservative assumptions reduce missed charger risk.

EV range planner

Use nominal battery size, recent efficiency, traffic speed, ambient temperature, and desired reserve to produce a planning range you can defend before departure.

Adjusted consumption-
Usable energy for trip-
Planning range-
Suggested stop after-
Operational note-

How it works

ChargeLedger treats range as an operating estimate. Each adjustment moves the plan closer to motorway reality.

1. Start from observed efficiency

Nominal WLTP figures are not used as the primary input. Recent consumption gives a stronger base, especially when tyres, roof racks, or terrain differ from brochure assumptions.

2. Add weather and speed penalties

Heating load and sustained speed have an outsized effect on usable distance. The planner applies moderate corrections instead of a single blunt multiplier.

3. Protect the arrival buffer

Keeping a reserve is less about caution and more about charger uncertainty. A planned 10–15% buffer materially lowers rerouting pressure.

Recent field notes

Three editorial pieces on planning discipline, charger behaviour, and the hidden cost structure behind electric ownership.

When motorway speed quietly erases 40 kilometres

Priya Henshaw explains why steady high-speed driving changes trip planning more than most first-time EV owners expect.

Read →

Charging etiquette is really queue management

Marcus Vale looks at stall choice, battery windows, and why poor charging habits spill into site congestion.

Read →

The ownership cost line items drivers often miss

Elena Brook maps tyre wear, home tariff timing, and depreciation assumptions that distort annual EV comparisons.

Read →

Operator feedback

Testimonials below are based on routine planning use cases rather than one-off promotional quotes.

Fleet supervisor, Leeds

We used to brief drivers with nominal range and hope for the best. ChargeLedger gave us a planning number that matched motorway duty closely enough to standardise dispatch notes.

Consultant, Utrecht

The reserve calculation changed how I plan winter appointments. It is the first quick tool I have seen that treats buffer as non-negotiable rather than optional.

Private owner, Bristol

The copy button sounds minor, yet it makes it easy to send a trip summary to family before a long run. The assumptions stay visible, which matters when plans change.

Frequently asked questions

These points reflect the assumptions built into the planner and the limits of model-agnostic calculations.

Why not use official range figures?

Official figures remain useful for comparison, but road planning benefits from recent observed consumption under your driving conditions.

Does the tool account for elevation?

Not directly. If a route includes long climbs or towing duty, raise base consumption to reflect the added demand.

Is 10% reserve enough?

It depends on charger density and reliability. In unfamiliar corridors, 12–15% is a more stable operating target.

Can I use the planner for city driving?

Yes, but its strongest value appears on intercity travel where speed and thermal loads create larger deviation from nominal range.

Why is the suggested stop earlier than expected?

The tool protects the reserve threshold. Many trip plans fail because drivers treat the displayed arrival charge as spendable energy.

How often should I update base efficiency?

Use the last two to three weeks of representative driving. Seasonal shifts and tyre changes can move the input materially.

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